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Book Summary InformationAuthor: Hermann Hesse Edition: Hardcover Audio: English (Published) Published: 1970 ISBN: 0374181667 Number of pages: 217 Publisher: Farrar, Straus and Giroux
Book Reviews of Klingsor's last summerBook Review: a story by story run-through of the collection Summary: 5 Stars
CHILD'S SOUL: Hesse is largely an autobiographical author. Even when events in his novels or stories took place in the distant past or in the fantastically created future, he wrote about what he had lived through. His renowned novel "Demian" is very much autobiographical. The story "Child's Soul" may be the only thing ever written by Hesse, which is more autobiographical than "Demian". The narrating person in "Child's Soul" does not have a mental equilibrium. He can not draw a line between good and evil, between love and destruction; his mental state is characterized by fear. Nonetheless, he only sees the "chaos" and takes its existence into consideration. His future fate is unknown, but there we see a sparkle of hope that he will gain a foot-hold and achieve the state of mental equilibrium. PS: the term "chaos" was used by Hesse himself in one of his articles. [Rating: 5/5]
KLEIN AND WAGNER: An uxoricide and a filicide escapes from Germany to Italy to find peace for his tormented soul. He finds there death, however. Unlike the narrating person in the story described above, here we know for sure that Klein self-destructs. This story, especially, is laden with philosophical passages. Here (and in the story described bellow, as well) we see how Hesse uses associations; "klein" is the German adjective that stands for "small" and Wagner is not only the name of another uxoricide and filicide, but also that of a famous composer, whose music is tied in Klein's imagination with eroticism of his youth. [Rating: 5/5]
KLINGSOR'S LAST SUMMER: a story of a dying painter, who, as we know from the preface, is only forty-two years old. In this case, the name Klingsor comes from one epic poem that dates back to the seventh century. In that poem Klingsor was a magician, which suggest some sort of kinship between the art and the magic. This particular story is somewhat ambiguously written, even Klingsor's death remains ambiguous. One can not say with a certainty whether Klingsor committed a suicide, even though the whole mood of this story is imbued with ideas of life's frailty and death's imminence. This ambiguous narration (which Hesse employed in many of his works) does capture the atmosphere in which Klingsor spent his last days (and perhaps most of his life), but it bears a mark of abstractness. [Rating: 4/5]
Literature & Fiction Books
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Narcissus and Goldmund: A Novelby Hermann Hesse Picador; Published: 2003-02-01; Paperback; BookBest price: $4.50Price in other shops: $16.00
Gertrude: A Novelby Hermann Hesse Picador; Published: 2005-08-01; Paperback; BookBest price: $10.09Price in other shops: $17.00
Demianby Hermann Hesse BN Publishing; Published: 2009-06-29; Paperback; BookBest price: $5.95Price in other shops: $15.00
Rosshaldeby Hermann Hesse, Ralph Manheim Picador; Published: 2003-07-01; Paperback; BookBest price: $7.96Price in other shops: $17.00
Pictor's Metamorphoses: And Other Fantasiesby Hermann Hesse Picador; Published: 2003-12-01; Paperback; BookBest price: $4.95Price in other shops: $16.00
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